the public.
When: 3:00 6:00 PM, Friday, Feb. 12 (4 - 7 EST/3 6 CST).
The meeting will be available via live web stream at: http://www.epa.gov/greatlakes/live.
Postings and information from WIMS Daily and eNewsUSA published by Waste Information & Management Services, Inc. (WIMS). Including information from the WIMS Daily Environmental HotSheet...
This Blog Named to LexisNexis' 2011 Top 50 List
In a release, Michigan State representatives issue a release saying they were launching "an aggressive online effort by sending a virtual postcard of a boat filled with Asian carp to Chicago and invited people from around the Great Lakes region to join their fight by e-mailing 'boatloads of carp' to Chicago bureaucrats like Metropolitan Water Reclamation District Executive Director Dick Lanyon and the Governor of Illinois, who are stalling action to protect Great Lakes." State Representative Mike Lahti (D-Hancock) said, "Summits are fine as far as they go, but meetings and position papers aren't enough to end this enormous threat to the Great Lakes. We need action now from the Illinois governor and the bureaucrats in charge of the Chicago locks."
Due to the incredible environmental threat posed by invasive species, lawyers from NRDC intervened in the shipping industry lawsuit alongside the State of New York, representing NWF. The Appellate Division of the New York State Supreme Court, Third Judicial Department, rejected shipping industry arguments that the New York ballast water regulations were illegal because they were stricter than the U.S. EPA's nationwide discharge permit. Marc Smith, Policy Manager with NWF said, "Today's court decision is an important victory in the ongoing saga to protect our majestic Great Lakes from invasive species. Requiring the shipping industry to install effective protections against these invaders is long over-due. Now more than ever do we need aggressive federal action to help reinforce New York's leadership to ensure a more comprehensive defense policy against invasive species."
The New York court's ruling that states have authority to adopt ballast water rules that are more protective than Federal standards is consistent with the decision last year in a lower state court as well as the Sixth Circuit Federal appeals court in Cincinnati to uphold Michigan's ballast water rules against a similar shipping industry challenge. NRDC and NWF also intervened in those cases, along with other environmental groups, to defend the challenged rules.
Access a release from NRDC and link to the court ruling and related information (click here).
Waste
Information & Management Services, Inc. (WIMS)
Publishers of
Michigan Waste Report,
REGTrak,
WIMS Daily & eNewsUSA
Other Blogs:
eNewsUSA,
REGTrak